Please see attached export, dxf file, and resulting code.Tool naming is broken unless I misunderstood the manual. In fact, T5 should not be called for the chain comp operation at all and it appears it is comping to the wrong side of the line anyway. Please fix!Thanksjnr

Thanks Scott, I hope it's fixed soon, we've been hoping for this feature for a very long time. Or maybe I just need to be schooled because I did something wrong, but either way I sure could use it to make some things easier. Have you tried it and found the same result?jnr

Looks like the problem is due to it being a chain layer without a tool diameter specified. This makes Control Nesting select the outline tool. If you designate a tool diameter d#p# (it will not be obeyed due to a name being supplied) it will then jump to the operation tools section and find the tool. We will get this fixed in the next version.

We've also located a problem with pockets using this feature. This will be fixed in the next release as well.

This feature appears to be working now, however this morning I encountered a tooling error. I saved the .cst file with tool names for each tool that I use frequently. I reloaded the .cst and nested a job - It appears that a tool with a name will not be called for a tenon / dado operation. Once I removed the name, the tool was called and .cnc file was created successfully. Can anyone else verify this, and if so, is it a bug or is it designed to work this way?Thanks,jnr

This is by design. If a tool is given a Tool Name in the Control Nesting Tooling dialog, it will only be used for operations that have been designated with that tool name. As of now, there are only 2 means for this designation. They are through the Tool Name feature in DXF or the KCDw Job Level Interface technique.